Vulnerable man stored drugs in Cork flat ‘for friendship of people’
The defendant had 63 previous convictions, only one of which was for having drugs for his own use, and none were for dealing.
A vulnerable man got involved in storing a €17,000 stash of cannabis, more in an effort to make friends rather than to make money, and he was also acting with some degree of fear, it emerged at a sentencing hearing.
Judge Helen Boyle imposed a fully suspended sentence of two years and six months on Cormac Fitzpatrick at Cork Circuit Criminal Court. She also had this advice for the 45-year-old: “Those people are not your friends.”
The offence of having cannabis for sale or supply at Fitzgerald’s Apartments at South Tce, Cork, was detected on November 13, 2024, when Detective Garda Eoin Harrington and other officers executed a search warrant, granted on the basis of confidential information.
The 45-year-old was asleep in the bedroom where gardaí found two packets containing cannabis with a total street value in excess of €17,000, as determined by Forensic Science Ireland.
Det Gda Harrington said that when questioned about the matter, Fitzpatrick, who was living in accommodation provided through the homeless charity Focus Ireland, said: “I wasn’t making any money out of it. Someone might throw me some drugs.
“I did it more for the friendship of people.”
Previous convictions
The defendant had 63 previous convictions, only one of which was for having drugs for his own use, and none were for dealing. The vast majority of his convictions were for public order offences.
Defence barrister Abigail Creed said the defendant was storing these drugs for other unnamed individuals. She suggested that he presented as quite a vulnerable man, and the detective agreed with this description.
Ms Creed also said: “He was under pressure to store these.”
Det Gda Harrington said: “That is a real possibility.”
The barrister said Fitzpatrick was raised in Mallow and studied computer science and went to America for a period. She said he was injured in a serious traffic accident. He suffered from mental health issues and developed a serious dependence on alcohol.
“He suffers from loneliness and a serious depressive illness,” Ms Creed added.
Judge Boyle said: “You are a vulnerable person suffering from a psychiatric illness as well as addictions. You were a store person for drugs, not receiving monetary gain — storing drugs for other people you were afraid of.
“Obviously, people who pressured you into storing drugs were not your friends.
“It is a significant quantity of drugs. Cannabis can kickstart psychosis and destroy people’s future and lives.
“You saved the State the time and expense of a trial by pleading guilty. You have a diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder.
“You are at a high risk of reoffending. The Probation Service say you need as much professional support as possible.”

App?

